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Oxford medicine
THE NEWSLETTER OF THE OXFORD MEDICAL ALUMNI OX F O R D M E D I C I N E . F E B RUA RY 2 0 0 7
Letter from the President OMA has had a good half year. The September meeting, designed to recognise the great contributions made by the first Nuffield Professor of Surgery, Sir Hugh Cairns, began with a Special Interest Seminar held on the Friday afternoon. This took the form of an excellent series of short papers by members of the Institute of Biomedical Engineering in areas of both diagnosis and therapeutics which preceded the annual reception held this year in the Boardroom of the Radcliffe Infirmary. About 70 members and guests came, there was much reminiscing (Philip Sheldon remembered his interview there when he was appointed senior registrar in radiology in 1950), but there was also concern over the importance of preserving artifacts, furniture, portraits and lists on the walls in gilt of hundreds of benefactors, some humble and some grand, now that the University owns the premises, bearing in mind the building’s listing as Grade 2*. On the Saturday, Colin Blakemore gave the Oxford Medical Society lecture, Trevor Hughes reviewed three centuries of neuroscience in Oxford from Thomas Willis to Sherrington and then Hugh Cairns, not forgetting Farquar Buzzard, who as Regius and the first clinical neurologist, played a prominent role in persuading Lord Nuffield to endow the medical school in order to provide for the five Nuffield chairs and the two Nuffield readerships. David Smith, recently retired from the Chair of Pharmacology, explained why he believes Alzheimer’s disease to be preventable, and Simon Wessely, who had been asked to advise the Government as to whether WW1 soldiers shot for cowardice should be pardoned, gave a remarkable account of his investigations (his advice was ignored!). Tipu Aziz illustrated why research on primates is so essential to the development of neurosurgical techniques for the control of involuntary movement, and Alistair Buchan and Peter Jezzard told of remarkable advances, underway here in Oxford, in the treatment of thrombotic stroke. In parallel to all this, those more socially minded were treated to a family tea party organised by Anne Ryan at 13
Norham Gardens and in the evening there were two splendid reunion dinners which filled the hall of Magdalen with graduates from1938 to 2005 and the hall at Wadham with graduates from 1981 and 1996, both finishing late. In November, John Walton very generously and kindly hosted a reception for us at the House of Lords to mark the 70th anniversary of Lord Nuffield’s benefaction. This provided an opportunity to thank a number of people who are helping Oxford medicine at the present time, financially, personally and through grant giving organisations, and in many other ways in these not easy political times. During the proceedings, Giles Henderson, Master of Pembroke, and Chairman of the Nuffield Medical Trustees gave an encouraging report on the state of the finances. Finally, as an unscheduled bonus, those who had never been inside the place before were treated to a highly entertaining personal tour of the premises by our host himself. Our well laid plans for 2007 have, I’m afraid, suffered something of a setback. Oxford University Society, (mindful of OMA’s success!), has moved its annual event to September making it impossible for colleges with the bigger halls to host our dinners. We have therefore decided to move our annual event to the Easter vacation in 2008. The annual meeting will now feature the Osler Lecture and the Oxford Medical Society lecture together with a programme of scientific papers, social events and reunion dinners.
Contents Letter from the President .1 Corporate Plan
. . . . . . . . . .2
Divisional Structures . . . . .3 Capital Priorities
. . . . . . . .3
Governance and Workforce Development . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Awards — Congratulations
. . . . . . . .5
Oxford’s First Textbook of Medicine . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Recent Acquisition . . . . . .10 Obituaries
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
OMA Events Diary 2007–2008 . . . . . . . . . . . .16
By the time you receive this, THE RADCLIFFE INFIRMARY WILL HAVE CLOSED, 24 years after the original intention to do so. As a consequence, the extensive new development at the JR will render the place unrecognizable to those of you last up there before 2001. High quality new buildings to provide for neurology and neurosurgery, eyes and ear nose and throat surgery, a Children’s Hospital, new car parks and new roads to accommodate new bus services, with not much that is
SPECIAL RADCLIFFE INFIRMARY COMMEMORATIVE SUPPLEMENT INSIDE